Princess Productions was a London based television production company started in September 1996 by Henrietta Conrad and Sebastian Scott, which produced broadcast shows and pilots for all the major British broadcasters across a variety of genres, mainly specialising in entertainment and factual entertainment programmes. Highlights included Got To Dance, Must Be the Music, T4 and The Sunday Night Project.

Based in Whiteleys in West London, Princess had its own television studio on the third floor and its own in house post production facility.

Since 2007, Princess was part of the Shine Group, one of the United Kingdom's largest television production company groups. On 4 May 2017, it was announced by its parent company that Princess would be closed at the end of the year, as it was "financially fragile", and was also losing its space in Whiteleys which is being redeveloped for mixed residential and commercial use.[1]

Must Be the Music – Sky1 talent competition for music acts who write and perform their own songs. All proceeds from record sales went direct to the artists. Hosted by Fearne Cotton and judged by Dizzee Rascal, Sharleen Spiteri and Jamie Cullium. (Sky 1 2010)

iTunes Festival – ITV2's coverage of the United Kingdom's biggest indoor music festival, including gigs from London's Roundhouse in Camden throughout every night of July. Presented by Fearne Cotton, Dave Berry and Matt Edmondson.

The Wright Stuff – British television chat show, hosted by Matthew Wright, and currently airing on Channel 5 each weekday at 9:15 am. The format is based upon the more traditional radio phone in, featuring well known guests discussing topical issues, and encouraging contributions from the studio and television audiences, text messages, e mails and a phone vote, originally produced by Anglia TV from 2000 to 2001. (Channel 5 2000–2018)

Something for the Weekend – weekly magazine style entertainment show, including cookery, celebrity guests and television clips. (BBC Two 2006–17 March 2012)

The Friday Night Project/The Sunday Night Project – weekly comedy-variety show where regular hosts Justin Lee Collins and Alan Carr are joined by a celebrity guest host. These guests provide an opening monologue, are interviewed by Alan and Justin and take questions from the studio audience. They also take part in comedy sketches, hidden camera stunts and a game show where someone from the audience is selected to win prizes. (Channel 4 2005–2009)

Eddie Stobart: Trucks & Trailers – docu soap series following the stories behind Britain's biggest haulage company and its drivers battles with the roads to get deliveries completed on time.

The Search – television show on Channel 4, which aired in 2007. Ten contestants with unique skills must solve a variety of ancient clues and puzzles from throughout history, with the aim in each episode of finding "The Symbol". The team which fulfils this directive wins the game and the losing team must then sacrifice a team member. The final episode saw the remaining (three) contestants compete to uncover a £50,000 hidden treasure.

Doctor, Doctor – live daily show which tackled a series of topical medical issues in front of a studio audience. Doctor Doctor was a one hour show, with medical experts in different fields answering viewers' questions about their physical and mental well being broadcast on Channel 5 in 2006.

Date My Mom (UK) – similar to the United States version of the show (Date My Mom), each episode features a different guy looking for love in the weirdest place – on dates with three different mums. He's not looking to hook up though, he's spending time with the mums to discover everything he can about their daughters. He won't be able to see a picture of the daughters on his dates, so he'll have to work hard to get the truth out of the mums. In the end, everyone meets up to hear his decision. This is the spot where he'll finally get to see what these daughters look like. Broadcast on MTV UK & Ireland in 2006–2007.

In October 2011, a Princess Productions employee left a message on the unofficial Army Rumour Service message boards, pitching the idea of flying British soldiers' wives and newborn babies into warzones as a surprise. The response was overwhelmingly negative.[2] Soon afterwards, the Princess Productions website went offline. The company also posted an apology on the forum.[2]